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04-05-2002, 09:31 PM | #331 | ||||
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Okay, I know that this won't satisfy Koy but I'm
going to have at the questions/arguments he refers to in his more recent posts, but I am going to do so in piecemeal fashion: that is just the way it works out best for me but, I believe also for readers of this thread. We return once again to the subject of the cause of death. Now remember we are trying to compare (potentially)TWO deaths: that of the Man of the Shroud and that of Jesus. So in general terms what do we have? This: Jesus' mode of death: crucifixion. Jesus' cause of death: ????????? Man of Shroud's mode of death: crucifixion. Man of Shroud's cause of death: ???????? So some perusal of the studies will be done to try to determine the cause of death in each instance (though they may be the SAME death). When, way back at the top of page 7 Koy took it as a given that the cause of death was blood loss what did I respond? Let's take a look: Quote:
1)there IS no concensus about the (immediate) cause of death. (There's always a lot of blood loss in crucifixion but that doesn't NECESSARILY mean that it is the IMMEDIATE cause of death). 2)those were the causes I best remembered from my readings over years as a Shroudie. 3) I was too lazy/didn't have the time to look in ALL the Shroud books and/or URLs to find yet other theories. 4) in the case of Jesus we have some good information but the witness was NOT a medical doctor as far as we know and a 1st Century MD would have limited knowledge of physiology anyway. 5) in the case of the Man of the Shroud we have, not a body to examine but merely an image of one on some linen. 6)to my way of thinking since both the cause of Jesus' death AND the cause of the Man of the Shroud's death might never be known for certain, a comparison might not be possible. Since early in the 20th Century there have been numerous investigators of the Shroud: many, if not all of the major ones are either mentioned by Meacham or listed in Meacham's bibliography. One pioneer in this area was Pierre Barbet. Barbet is famous for having been curious about the location of the nails marks on the hands of the Man of the Shroud: they were NOT where a medieval artist would portray them: dead center of the palms. Instead they were in the wrist area. Curious, Barbet did some experiments with corpses: he tried nailing them to makeshift crosses and found that when he nailed them thru the palms of the hands that they would NOT support the weight of the body: the flesh was torn and the body fell. Only when he nailed them thru the wrist area did they support the body. This fact would have been unknown to 13th and 14th Century artists who might want to be True Shroud forgers. Barbet also believed that the cause of death of the Man of the Shroud was asphyxiation. In Meacham's URL there are two papers by Zugibe: one I already referred to about the washing of the body and a SECOND one which touches on our concerns here. After praising Barbet as a pioneer, Zugibe disagrees with him about a few things: Quote:
in 1995 disagreeing with Barbet whose work was in the 1930s. The last point should be our focus. Zugibe's paper describes experiments with volunteer "crucifixion victims" and goes into great detail. Space forbids the copying of much of it but Zugibe does say: Quote:
at the end is: Quote:
<a href="http://www.shroud.com/zugibe.htm" target="_blank">http://www.shroud.com/zugibe.htm</a> In my next post I will get back to cause of death (perhaps the most problematic of questions)... Cheers! [ April 05, 2002: Message edited by: leonarde ]</p> |
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04-05-2002, 10:06 PM | #332 |
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Before calling it a night I thought I would do one
more post on this question. To recap: 1)Barbet maintains that asphyxia is the cause of the death of the man of the Shroud. 2)Zugibe, far more recently, based on experiments delineated in the cited URL says that asphyxia is seldom/never the cause of death. That cause is shock. 3)Bucklin in one paragraph refers to both "postural asphyxiation" AND "severe blood loss" AND "fluid accumulation in the chest cavities related to terminal cardio-respiratory failure." So in the case of Bucklin I would say he is talking about multiple causes/factors. ALL the forensics texts I consulted in recent days had "crucifixion" under "death by slow asphyxiation", "death by postural asphyxiation", or in one case "death by smothering". That is the best I can do in recapping the cause of death controversy. It really isn't settled: in general terms, in the case of the Man of the Shroud, and in the case of Jesus. Cheers! |
04-05-2002, 10:26 PM | #333 | ||||
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Quote:
Quote:
Do you seriously expect me to believe the opinion of every random atheist examiner (who, after all are hardly unbiased on the matter) who's ever come up with a crack-pot theory about the Shroud that has been disproven by several teams of experts? Quote:
Quote:
Tercel |
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04-05-2002, 10:32 PM | #334 | |
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Tercel,
Quote:
Do you seriously expect me to believe the opinion of every random atheist examiner (who, after all are hardly unbiased on the matter) who's ever come up with a crack-pot theory about the Shroud that has been disproven by several teams of experts? I'm pretty sure that the three teams in question decided that the shroud was a medieval fake. The rhetorical question "Do you think the three teams were hand picked by MM O'Hare?" was meant to indicate that these were objective analysts, not raving atheist fundies. |
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04-05-2002, 10:35 PM | #335 | |||
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Tercel,
Please accept my apology for jumping in this late into the thread. However, you said something that caught my attention. Suppose, for the moment, that the shroud indeed is about 2,000 years old, and that it did belong to Christ. Note, of course, that these two assertions have yet to be proven, but suppose they are true. You said: Quote:
Quote:
1. The image on the shroud has no natural cause. 2. The image on the shroud is a direct result of whatever supernatural process raised Jesus from the dead. I don't see how 1. implies 2. Could you please provide a proof? Quote:
Sincerely, Goliath [ April 05, 2002: Message edited by: Goliath ]</p> |
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04-06-2002, 12:50 AM | #336 | |
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Quote:
We've talked about carbon-14 dating, "biofilm", and countless other natural scientific variables, and for what? Tercel has rendered this entire thread a waste of everyone's time. If another team examined the shroud today and dated it back to a week last tuesday, xians can simply shrug their shoulders and say "Hey, god made it appear only ten days old." It wouldn't matter to Tercel or any xian of his ilk if a thousand teams examined the shroud and every one of them declared it a 14th century fake, because how the fuck can you date something with miraculous properties? It creases me when xians attempt to debate on a rational, scientific, naturalistic level, but when the going gets tough, they can switch to the supernatural level without a blush, and expect us to play along. If you're forced to introduce miracles, you've lost the debate. At least around here. This isn't some Mickey Mouse fundie forum, you know. Have a nice day. |
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04-06-2002, 02:45 AM | #337 | |
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Scientiae,
On April 4 (on page 13 or 14 of this thread, I believe), you said: Quote:
In Christ, Douglas |
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04-06-2002, 05:44 AM | #338 | |
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Two unrelated items here: though I believe Barbet's study of the Shroud did START in the 1930s as I stated, he wrote at least one paper on
it (cited by Meacham) in 1953 and thus had a long, distinguished and (still) influential career. The other item: posted by Britinusa: Quote:
and "dated it back to a week last tuesday," we would know 100% certainly that the dating was wrong! Wrong! Wrong! Why? Because the Shroud's whereabouts are NOT in dispute by ANYONE since at least the 1350s: it was in Lirey, then in Chambery , France, and eventually Turin, Italy where it got its present name. A "date" of "last week" would be not just "off" but so stupidly off that not even most authenticity opponents would accept it. That Britinusa can present and swallow this even as a mock-hypothetical argument shows how gullible many anti-authenticity are about carbon dating: if THAT test tells them something they want to hear (and any date short of 1900 years will do) then it is the last word on the Shroud of Turin. In the early going here, (first 5 pages or so), I posted a link to a URL with an exchange between the archaeologist, Meacham, and a radio-carbon dating specialist. Meacham states clearly ---and even his opponent, the radio-carbon dating specialist acknowledges-----that C-14 dating routinely produces "anomalous" dates/date ranges (ie ones that are off BY CENTURIES) and that archaeologists routinely put it in the footnotes of their studies but otherwise ignore them. For a working archaeologist C-14 dating is merely one tool among many and if a C-14 date conflicts with ALL other skeins of evidence, it is almost always ignored. There are literally dozens of reasons why the Shroud of Turin cannot date from the 13th/14th Centuries: one of the biggest overarching ones is: it is the burial cloth of a real crucifixion victim and people were just not being crucified in the 13th/14th Centuries. (For the unlikelihood of the "snuff Shroud" scenario, see my exchanges with Jack the Bodiless on pages 8 and 9) Cheers! [ April 06, 2002: Message edited by: leonarde ]</p> |
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04-06-2002, 05:47 AM | #339 | |
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Quote:
Zuigbe's conclusions are not merely contradictory with Barbet's but he specifically notes how the latter's hypotheses were fundamentally flawed. For those who do not know, Zuigbe is actually making a better attempt at science than leonarde is. The theories are not merely contradictory, but one is clearly more scientifically credible. However, the link only provides cursory presentation of Zuigbe's experimentation. Even for a supposedly scientific experiment, there are poorly defined controls here. SC [ April 06, 2002: Message edited by: Scientiae ]</p> |
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04-06-2002, 05:53 AM | #340 | |
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Posted by SC:
Quote:
the thread, SC: you are embarrassing yourself again on this thread. |
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